Thank you, Amit, and good afternoon, everyone. The fourth quarter of 2024 did not meet our expectations with key metrics falling short of our forecast. Before diving into the numbers, I'd like to begin my remarks with a high-level discussion of the factors driving the miss. While the fundamentals of our cloud business remains strong, multiple factors did not play out as we expected. First, our renewal rates lower than forecast. What we refer to as natural churn, which excludes the impact of customer migrations, increased by roughly 2 percentage points versus our forecast for both cloud and self-managed subscriptions and by approximately one half percentage point for maintenance. Second, we saw a significant acceleration of cloud modernization deals this quarter. As a result, the contribution of on-premise to cloud modernization deals, as a percentage of total new cloud bookings was significantly higher than expected. Modernization deals were over one-third of our new cloud bookings in Q4 compared to the mid-20s in prior quarters. While this result is consistent with our long-term cloud-only strategy and a good thing overall, in the short-term, it results in lower net new ARR because of the accounting treatment of the maintenance and subscription credits we give to our customers during the migration period. The third key driver of lower than forecast total ARR in Q4 was higher than expected roll-off of modernization related self-managed subscription and maintenance ARR. This reflected the success of our customer cloud modernizations being completed on time, which is a positive long-term trend. In addition to these 3 factors that impacted ARR, GAAP revenue was further impacted by a greater than forecast reduction in renewal term length for on-premise, self-managed contracts. We saw this happening in Q2 of this year, and we reduced our revenue forecast at that time to reflect the trend. But in Q4, the average renewal term length continued to decline more than we expected. As Amit mentioned, we believe this reflects the fact that more of our customers are beginning to plan for modernization of their on-premise data workloads, which we expect will be positive for us in the future. Finally, lower than forecast professional services revenues impacted GAAP revenue and unfavorable FX due to the strengthening of the US dollar in November were a headwind to both GAAP revenue and aero. So with that, now let me get to the Q4 numbers, starting with the total ARR. Total ARR finished the year at $1.73 billion, an increase of 6.1% over the prior year, which was 1% below the midpoint of our guidance. The growth was driven primarily by new cloud workloads and strong cloud net expansion with existing customers, as well as accelerate migrations from our on-prem base to cloud. Foreign exchange rates negatively impacted total ARR by $2 million on a year-over-year basis for the fourth quarter and $3.8 million year-over-year basis for the full year. Next, cloud subscription was $827 million, a 34% increase year-over-year. Cloud subscription ARR now represents 48% of total ARR, up from 38% a year ago. This result was about $9 million below the midpoint of our October guidance, primarily driven by the lower renewal rate of cloud subscriptions this quarter and the higher-than-expected contribution of on-prem to cloud modernization deals as a percent of total new cloud bookings this quarter. Approximately 68% of cloud subscription net new ARR in the trailing 12 months came from new cloud workloads and expansion with approximately 40% of that growth coming from new customers to Informatica. Modernizations accounted for 32% of our trailing full quarter cloud subscription net new ARR, up from 24% last quarter. Our cloud net retention rate was 124% in the quarter, and our cloud gross renewal rate was in the low 90s. Foreign exchange negatively impacted cloud subscription ARR by $716,000 on a quarter-over-quarter basis and $1.9 million year-over-year. Self-managed subscription ARR, which we no longer actively sell declined in the quarter to $447 million. This was down 5% sequentially and down 13% year-over-year, due to the effects of natural churn and the roll-off of migrated on-prem workloads to the IDMC cloud platform. The third component of total ARR is maintenance for on-premise perpetual licenses sold in the past, which now represents 26% of total ARR. Maintenance ARR was down approximately 9% year-over-year to $451 million, a somewhat greater decline than we expected. Most of the greater than forecast decline is due to more roll-off of modernization-related ARR as projects were completed. The natural churn rate of maintenance was slightly higher than forecast, about 50 basis points. Subscription ARR, which simply the sum of cloud subscription ARR and self-managed ARR, grew 13% year-over-year to $1.274 billion. As we indicated last quarter, beginning in Q1, we will no longer provide summary subscription metrics, including ARR, customer count and renewal rate. Modernizing our on-prem customer base to Informatica's IDMC is an important part of the strategy. As of the end Q4, 9.4% of our maintenance and self-managed ARR base has been modernized to the cloud or is in the process of modernizing up from 6.8% last quarter. We have a life-to-date average 1.9 ARR uplift ratio on these modernizations, down from 2.0 last quarter. Over the past four quarters, our average modernization uplift ratio was 1.7. This reflects a lower average uplift ratio for power center Cloud Edition modernizations, which were over 80% of modernization deals in Q4. We had been expecting this decline in the average uplift ratio, and we expect to decline a bit more in 2025 to approximately 1.5 to 1.7. We are very comfortable with this lower uplift ratio as we have found that cloud modernization typically drive significant net expansion sales upfront, have healthy expansion in term, and they have better renewal rates than non-expansion than non-modernization new deals. Now I'd like to review our revenue results for the for the fourth quarter. GAAP total revenues fourth quarter were -- of 2024 were $428 million, a decrease of 3.8% year-over-year. Foreign exchange rates positively impacted total revenues by approximately $1.3 million on a year-over-year basis, but FX was about a $2 million headwind to revenue compared to our forecast FX rates at the beginning of the quarter. Total revenues were approximately $30 million below the midpoint of our October guidance due to four primary factors: lower upfront revenue per ASC 606 accounting standards, for self-managed subscription renewals due to the lower-than-expected renewal rate, lower average duration of self-managed subscriptions that did not renew -- that did renew, lower professional services revenue and the strengthening of the US dollar in November. Cloud subscription revenue was approximately $187 million or 44% of total revenues, growing 33% year-over-year. As a reminder, due to the timing difference between revenue recognition and ARR, the relative growth rates of these two metrics will differ from period-to-period. Self-managed subscription support and license revenue combined was $111 million or 26% of total revenue and declined 32% year-over-year. As mentioned before, the impact of upfront revenue recognition of the license component or on-premise contract renewals and new bookings has a significant impact on our reported GAAP revenue. In order to help provide more clarity to investors on the impact of this upfront recognized revenue, we've added a new table to our investor materials, which breaks out the upfront ASC 606 revenue from our ratably recognized software revenue. As you'll see from that table, upfront recognized self-managed revenues declined by $46 million versus Q4 2023. And for the full year, upfront recognized revenue declined by $73 million. We will be providing the disclosure of upfront recognized versus ratably recognized revenue every quarter going forward in our investor materials and in our 10-Ks and 10-Qs. Maintenance revenue was $111 million and represented 26% of total revenue for the quarter. The maintenance renewal rate was 92%, down about 3-percentage points year-over-year and 2% versus last quarter. This renewal rate decline was primarily due to greater than forecast modernization roll-off. Professional services revenues, which includes implementation consulting and education, we're down about $1.3 million year-over-year to $20 million. As a reminder, our implementation services revenue has been declining as our services partners assume a greater share of that work for our customers, and we expect this trend to continue in 2025. Turning to geographic distribution of our business. US revenue declined 6% year-over-year to approximately $264 million, representing 62% of total revenue. The decline in US revenue growth is primarily attributable to the year-over-year decline in self-managed license and support services. International revenue declined 1% year-over-year to $164 million, representing 38% of total revenue. Now, I'd like to move on to our profitability metrics. Please note, I will discuss non-GAAP results unless otherwise stated. In Q4, our gross margin was 84%, 1.5 percentage points higher year-over-year. We remain focused on maintaining healthy gross margins as of our transitions to the cloud. Operating expenses were lower than our forecast for the quarter, but operating income was below the midpoint of our October guidance by approximately $10 million due to lower revenue. Operating margin was $0.379, a 150 basis point improvement from a year ago. For the full year 2024, operating margin improved by 380 basis points over the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA was $166 million and net income was $129 million. Net income per diluted share, were $0.41 based on approximately 314 million outstanding diluted shares. Basic share count was approximately 305 million shares. Adjusted unlevered free cash flow after tax was $180 million, $24 million above the midpoint of our guidance, primarily lower cash taxes than forecast and unrealized FX gains on US dollar cash balances held in foreign subsidiaries. Cash paid for interest in the quarter was $32.5 million, consistent with expectations. I'd like to provide an update on our share repurchase activity. During the fourth quarter, we spent $103 million to repurchase 3.8 million shares of Class A common stock at an average price of $26.66 through open market purchases. Additionally, from January 1 through February 12, we spent $27 million to repurchase another 1.1 million shares at an average price of $25.36. In total, we have reduced our total share count as of yesterday by about 1.6% as a result of these repurchases. And earlier this week, our Board approved an additional $400 million stock repurchase authorization, bringing the total authorization to $800 million. Taking these repurchases into account, we have $670 million remaining available under our $800 million share repurchase program. We intend to continue repurchasing our shares in the open market for the remainder of this quarter targeting similar dollar volumes as last quarter. We ended the fourth quarter in a strong cash position with cash plus short-term investments of $1.2 billion, an increase of $240 million year-over-year. Net debt was $591 million and trailing 12 months of adjusted EBITDA was $551 million. This resulted in a net leverage ratio of 1.1 times at the end of December. Now, I'll turn to 2025 guidance. Based upon the dynamics we saw unfold in our business at the end of Q4, we have lowered our forecast for 2025 relative to our prior expectations. We set our forecast and guidance assuming lower renewal rates than we had previously expected for self-managed cloud and maintenance, higher on-prem to cloud modernization deals as a percent of our total cloud bookings, a slightly low average modernization uplift ratio, shorter self-managed renewal term lengths and the continued decline in professional services. These changes to our forecast assumptions result in total ARR and total GAAP revenue growth, several points lower than we had previously planned and our operating income and free cash flow margin will not expand as expected due to lower revenue. We expect total ARR and total revenue growth to increase in 2026, but not the levels provided in the medium-term guidance we first offered at the end of 2023. We are not providing new medium-term guidance at this time, but we expect to do so later this year. Taking all this into account, we are establishing the following guidance for the full year ending December 31, 2025. Note that all growth rates refer to the midpoint of the guidance range. We expect GAAP total revenues to be in the range of $1.67 billion to $1.72 billion, representing approximately 3.4% year-over-year growth or approximately 4.6% on a constant currency basis. We expect total ARR to be in the range of $1.755 billion to $1.795 billion representing approximately 2.9% year-over-year growth or approximately 3.2% on a constant currency basis. We expect Cloud Subscription ARR to be in the range of $1.019 billion to $1.051 billion, representing approximately 25.1% year-over-year growth or approximately 25.3% on a constant currency basis. We expect non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $146 million to $566 million, representing approximately 3.5% year-over-year growth. And we expect adjusted unleveraged free cash flow after tax in the range of $540 million to $580 million, representing approximately 3.3% year-over-year decrease. Our guidance for the first quarter ending March 31, 2025 is as follows: we expect GAAP total revenues to be in the range of $380 million to $400 million, representing approximately 0.4% year-over-year growth or approximately 2.1% on a constant currency basis. We expect total ARR to be in the range of $1.673 billion to $1.697 billion representing approximately 3% year-over-year growth or approximately 3% on a constant currency basis. We expect Cloud subscription ARR to be in the range of $840 million to $852 million, representing approximately 30% year-over-year growth or approximately 29% -- 29.7% on constant basis. We expect non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $98 million to $112 million, representing approximately 3.9% year-over-year decrease. The press release includes the table showing the expected net FX impact for Q1 and full year 2025 on a constant currency basis. For modeling purposes, I'd like to provide a few more pieces of additional information. First, we expect adjusted unlevered free cash flow after tax for the first quarter to be in the range of $140 million to $160 million. Second, we estimate cash paid for interest will be approximately $30 million in the first quarter and approximately $118 million for the full year using forward interest rates based on 1 month SOFR and a credit -- spread of 225 basis points. For tax rates, we reported a full year 2024 non-GAAP tax rate of 22%, and we expect to be -- we got to be consistent in the full year of 2025. Looking at fiscal 2026 and beyond, we expect a long-term steady-state non-GAAP tax rate of 24%, which reflects the normalized taxes in the jurisdictions where we operate and under currently enacted tax laws. Cash taxes in full year 2025 are expected to be $70 million to $75 million, which is about $5 million higher than our cash taxes in 2024. And lastly, our share assumptions, For the first quarter, we expect basic weighted average shares outstanding to be approximately 304 million shares and diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be approximately 312 million shares. For the full year, we expect basic weighted average shares outstanding to be approximately 300 million shares and diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be approximately 316 million shares. Please note that the share count forecast do not include the impact of the share repurchases we intend to pursue between now and the end of quarter. And with that, I'll turn the call back to Vic for Q&A.